Outpost Recordings | |
---|---|
Founded | January 26, 1996 |
Founder |
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Defunct | January 2000 |
Status | Defunct |
Distributor(s) |
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Genre | Various |
Country of origin | United States |
Location | Los Angeles, California |
Official website | outpostrec.com (Archived on January 11, 1998) |
Outpost Recordings was an American record label, founded in January 1996 by Scott Litt, Mark Williams and Andy Gershon. The label was launched as a joint venture with Geffen Records, who originally handled the label's marketing, promotion and distribution.
Outpost Recordings achieved its greatest commercial successes with Days of the New and The Crystal Method, but never became a financially profitable operation. After an unsuccessful pairing with Interscope Records in 1999 following Geffen's closure, the label closed down in January 2000.
Outpost Recordings was launched on January 26, 1996, by producer Scott Litt, former Virgin Records A&R head Mark Williams and artist manager Andy Gershon. [1] According to Gershon, "The reason we chose the name Outpost is our plan is to be on the frontier of what's happening in the future." [1] In spite of its founders' backgrounds being primarily in the alternative rock genre, Williams said that the label would not specialize in any particular genre and that they only wanted to "sign artists who make music we love. Period." [2] Prior to its official launch, Outpost signed a five-year, multi-million dollar joint-venture deal with Geffen Records, who agreed to handle the label's marketing, promotion and distribution worldwide. [1] [2] [3] Shortly after its launch, Outpost signed Veruca Salt over from Geffen. [4]
On February 23, 1996, Outpost signed its first new act, Canadian singer/songwriter Hayden. [5] His debut album Everything I Long For, originally released in 1995, was reissued through Outpost/Geffen in May 1996 as the label's first release. [6] The album sold moderately well in Japan and Canada (the latter where it was instead distributed by Hayden's own label, Hardwood Records) but found little success in the United States, where it had only sold 23,000 copies by April 1998. [7] Veruca Salt's second album Eight Arms to Hold You , released on February 11, 1997, served as the label's first original release. [8] In January 1997, Outpost signed a deal with the independent EDM label City of Angels to distribute its releases outside of North America, where the genre was more popular. [9] [10] The deal also gave Outpost the ability to sign some of City of Angels' artists, most notably The Crystal Method, directly to the label. [10]
1997 saw Outpost experience its greatest commercial successes with Days of the New's self-titled debut album and The Crystal Method's Vegas , [11] which were certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in 1998 and 2007, respectively. [12] The lead single from Days of the New's album, "Touch, Peel and Stand", stayed at number 1 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks Chart for sixteen weeks [13] and was named the "Greatest of All Time Mainstream Rock Song" by Billboard in 2021. [14]
Outpost never became a financially profitable operation. [11] Following the merger between Universal Music Group and PolyGram in 1999, Geffen Records was closed and the label was left without a distributor. [15] The label asked Zach Horowitz, UMG's COO, to be paired with MCA Records, but relations between the two labels quickly turned sour when Outpost discovered that UMG were planning to do a deal with MCA that would reduce the label's A&R budget and keep Days of the New at Interscope Records, which Williams found "unacceptable". [11] Outpost subsequently attempted to work with Interscope, releasing two albums together in August 1999; Hot Sauce Johnson's Truck Stop Jug Hop and Day's of the New's second self-titled album. [11] Both albums fared poorly commercially, and both Williams and Gershon felt that Interscope was a poor pairing for Outpost. [11] According to Gershon:
"The original reason our joint venture with Geffen was successful was because they didn't put out a lot of records and they needed help in A&R. Interscope's the exact opposite. They have great A&R, and they put out a lot of albums... To be honest [...] the minute they closed down Geffen, we were living on borrowed time." [11]
On January 15, 2000, Billboard reported that Outpost had ended its deal with UMG and would likely shut down by the month's end. [11] As part of an agreement between the two labels, Days of the New and the Crystal Method were transferred over to Interscope, with the rest of Outpost's artists either being transferred to other UMG labels or released from their contracts. [11] [16] [17] Nina Gordon's Tonight and the Rest of My Life , which had been due for release through Outpost/Interscope, was instead issued through Warner Bros. Records in June 2000. [18] Whiskeytown's Pneumonia , which was in the process of being mixed and mastered when Outpost folded, was released through Lost Highway in May 2001. [15] [19] [17]
Geffen Records is an American record label, founded in 1980 by David Geffen. Originally a music subsidiary of the now-defunct Geffen Pictures, it is owned by the Interscope Geffen A&M (IGA) faction of Universal Music Group (UMG).
Veruca Salt is an American alternative rock band founded in Chicago in 1992 by vocalist-guitarists Nina Gordon and Louise Post, drummer Jim Shapiro, and bassist Steve Lack. They are best known for their first single, "Seether", which was released on the 1994 album American Thighs. That success was followed up with 1997's Eight Arms to Hold You. By 1998, Post was the only original member still in the band and continued on with other musicians. Veruca Salt released the album Resolver in 2000 and the album IV in 2006. After a hiatus in 2012, the band reformed with its original lineup. Their fifth studio album, Ghost Notes, was released in 2015.
American Thighs is the 1994 debut studio album by American alternative rock band Veruca Salt. The album features the single "Seether".
Eight Arms to Hold You is the second studio album by alternative rock band Veruca Salt. It was released on February 11, 1997, through Outpost/Geffen Records.
Interscope Records is an American record label based in Santa Monica, California, owned by Universal Music Group through its Interscope Geffen A&M imprint. Founded in late 1990 by Jimmy Iovine and Ted Field as a $20 million joint venture with Atlantic Records of Warner Music Group and Interscope Communications, it differed from most record labels by letting A&R staff control decisions and allowing artists and producers full creative control. Interscope's first hit records arrived in under a year, and it achieved profitability in 1993. Chair and CEO until May 2014, Iovine was succeeded by John Janick.
James Iovine is an American entrepreneur, former record executive, and media proprietor. He is best known as the co-founder of Interscope Records. He became chairman and CEO of Interscope Geffen A&M, an umbrella music unit formed by Universal Music Group in 1999.
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Days of the New was an American rock band from Charlestown, Indiana, formed in 1995. The band later relocated to Louisville, Kentucky. They consisted of vocalist/guitarist Travis Meeks and a variety of supporting musicians. They are best known for the hit singles "Touch, Peel and Stand", "The Down Town", "Shelf in the Room", and "Enemy", as well as radio hits "Weapon and the Wound", "Hang On To This" and "Die Born". "Touch, Peel and Stand" was named, ″Greatest of All-Time Mainstream Rock Song″ by Billboard Magazine.
DGC Records was an American record label that operated as a division of Interscope Geffen A&M Records, which is owned by Universal Music Group.
Paul Hayden Desser, who records as Hayden, is a Canadian singer-songwriter from Thornhill, Ontario.
Nina Rachel Gordon Shapiro, known as Nina Gordon, is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist. She co-founded the alternative rock band Veruca Salt and played on their first two studio albums, American Thighs (1994) and Eight Arms to Hold You (1997). During that time, Gordon wrote the band's hit singles "Seether" and "Volcano Girls". After leaving Veruca Salt, she released two solo albums, Tonight and the Rest of My Life (2000) and Bleeding Heart Graffiti (2006). She then rejoined Veruca Salt for their album Ghost Notes (2015).
Whiskeytown was an American alternative country band formed in 1994 from Raleigh, North Carolina. Fronted by Ryan Adams, the group included members Caitlin Cary, Phil Wandscher, Eric "Skillet" Gilmore, and Mike Daly. They disbanded in 2000 with Adams leaving to pursue his solo career. Whiskeytown gradually expanded its sound outside the confines of alternative country while still maintaining its alternative roots.
Universal Records was a record label owned by Universal Music Group and operated as part of the Universal Motown Republic Group. The label has been dormant since 2006, due to Universal Motown and Universal Republic Records being formed and taking all of the artists from it. Those labels were eventually combined to form the latest iteration of Republic Records.
DreamWorks Records was an American record label founded in 1996 by David Geffen, Mo Ostin, his son Michael Ostin and Lenny Waronker as a subsidiary of DreamWorks Pictures. The label operated until 2003 when it was sold to Universal Music Group. The label itself also featured a Nashville, Tennessee-based subsidiary, DreamWorks Nashville, which specialized in country music and was shut down in 2006 then moved to MCA Nashville. The company's logo was designed by Roy Lichtenstein and was his last commission before his death in 1997.
Tonight and the Rest of My Life is the debut album from Veruca Salt co-founder, Nina Gordon. The album was recorded with Bob Rock at his Maui recording studio.
Baby Makin' Music is the thirtieth studio album by the American Ohio musical soul group, the Isley Brothers. It was released under the short-lived Def Soul Classics imprint on May 9, 2006.
Everything I Long For is the debut album by Canadian singer-songwriter Hayden. It was initially released in Canada on March 1, 1995 through his own label, Hardwood Records, in conjunction with Sonic Unyon. It was later re-released in May 1996 internationally on Outpost Recordings/Geffen Records. A 12" vinyl version was also released in 1996 on Hardwood/Genius Records.
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Suretone Records is an American record label established in 2006 as a joint venture by Jordan Schur, former CEO of Geffen Records, and Interscope Records, to release alternative rock music. Several high-profile bands such as Weezer, The Cure, Rooney, New Found Glory and Angels and Airwaves remained on Geffen and carried the Suretone imprint.
[...] Hayden, whose "Everything I Long For" entered stores on Tuesday.